Elephants Find Paradise in Tennessee

In recognition of the commitment, perseverance, and milestones achieved by The Elephant Sanctuary in Tennessee, the State of Tennessee, Lewis County and the City of Hohenwald have declared October 2008 as Elephant Awareness Month.

Advocacy for Animalssalutes the work of this exceptional institution.

Hohenwald, Tennessee, south of Nashville, lies in an area of forests, lakes, and rolling fields. Located in this rural paradise is the 2,700-acre Elephant Sanctuary, established in 1995 to provide protected, natural-habitat refuges where “old, sick, and needy elephants can once again walk the earth in peace and dignity.” The Sanctuary’s secondary mission is spreading the word about “the crisis facing these social, sensitive, passionately intense, playful, complex, exceedingly intelligent and endangered creatures.”

All of the elephants currently living at the Sanctuary were originally taken from their herds in the wild when they were infants. Most come to the Elephant Sanctuary after years of performing in circuses and other entertainment venues. Many arrive with chronic illnesses or unresolved injuries. All have suffered from inadequate care, poor housing, isolation, and stress. Some have suffered routine rough handling or outright abuse. So “They loaded up their trunks and they moved to Tennessee.”

Beginnings

In 1995 Carol Buckley, who had owned and operated a company managing elephants in entertainment, joined forces with elephant trainer Scott Blais to cofound the Elephant Sanctuary. Carol’s elephant Tarra was the first resident. Blais is operations director, facilities designer, and a primary caregiver for seven of the Sanctuary’s 17 elephants; Buckley is executive director, primary caregiver for seven elephants, and and an expert on elephant care. The Sanctuary now contains separate habitats for Asian and for African elephant herds (as in the wild, herds are made up of only females), heated barns for inclement weather, large fenced enclosures, and a quarantine facility for sick elephants. An education center is in the works in downtown Hohenwald.

The animals, many of whom spent long days—even years—tethered to short chains, are free to roam and explore the hundreds of acres in their habitats, to bathe in the ponds, and to form relationships with the other herd members, often developing special individual bonds. They are free to express their nature as elephants and are not required to perform or be on exhibition.

Kindness, not coercion

The caregiving staff follows a passive control system, a non-dominance management system that rejects the brutality and intimidation commonly practiced by elephant trainers. Mutual respect and gentle coaxing and encouragement replace pain and coercion. The Sanctuary has had great success with this method, even with elephants identified as having troubled or unpredictable temperaments. Tapping into the strong herd and hierarchical instincts of elephants, caregivers gain the trust of the elephants by demonstrating patience and understanding of needs. Care includes bathing and grooming, custom diets, monitoring of activities and vital signs, and treatment of injuries or chronic conditions.

One subgroup of the Sanctuary’s herd is the “Hawthorn elephants,” formerly owned by the Hawthorn Corporation of Illinois, a company that raised and trained elephants for circuses. In 2004 the U.S. Department of Agriculture sued Hawthorn, alleging numerous instances of neglect and abuse of their elephants. Beatings and outright torture were commonplace. Eight Hawthorn elephants rescued in 2006 brought the total to 11 elephants from the Hawthorn Corporation. They are now known as the Divas and include Delhi, Lota, and Misty.

The Sanctuary’s extensive Web site contains biographies of all the elephants that have lived at the sanctuary (six have died there), detailing their histories and how they came to be at the Sanctuary. Accounts of the elephants’ lives are tender and moving. Consider this excerpt by Carol Buckley of the encounter between Jenny, one the the sanctuary’s residents, and the newly arrived Shirley:

Jenny came into the barn for the first time since Shirley’s arrival at around 7:00 p.m. There was an immediate urgency in Jenny’s behavior. She wanted to get close to Shirley who was divided by two stalls. Once Shirley was allowed into the adjacent stall the interaction between her and Jenny became quite intense. Jenny wanted to get into the stall with Shirley desperately. She became agitated, banging on the gate and trying to climb through and over. After several minutes of touching and exploring each other, Shirley started to ROAR and I mean ROAR—Jenny joined in immediately. The interaction was dramatic, to say the least, with both elephants trying to climb in with each other and frantically touching each other through the bars. I have never experienced anything even close to this depth of emotion.

We opened the gate and let them in together….they are as one bonded physically together. One moves, and the other moves in unison. It is a miracle and joy to behold. All day yesterday (July 7) they moved side by side and when Jenny lay down, Shirley straddled her in the most obvious protective manner and shaded her body from the sun and harm. This relationship is intense and resembles that of mother and daughter. We are so blessed.

As a footnote to the story above, Jenny and Shirley were both at the same circus when Jenny was a calf and Shirley was 30 years old. They were separated 22 years ago. They remained together at the Sanctuary until Jenny’s death, which resulted from the injury she sustained at the Hawthorn facility.

The Elephant Sanctuary’s goal is to expand their facility to provide homes for a total of 100 elephants. The Sanctuary relies on fund-raising and public support of its mission. The cost of refuge is $125,000 per elephant per year.

Images: Winky, Shirley, Jenny, and Bunny—www.elephants.com; aerial view of the Sanctuary with boundaries marked—Used with Permission, The Elephant Sanctuary in Tennessee; Carol Buckley and Scott Blais with Shirley and Bunny—Used with Permission, The Elephant Sanctuary in Tennessee; Scott coaxes new arrival Dulary out of the transport—Photo by Nancy Rhoda; Jenny and Shirley—Used with Permission, the Elephant Sanctuary in Tennessee

How Can I Help?

Books We Like

Just for Elephants
Travels with Tarra
By Carol Buckley

This week’s recommended readings are written by Sanctuary founder Carol Buckley. They are intended for children. Travels with Tarra tells the story of Tarra’s days as a performer and of the bond between her and Carol. Just for Elephants relates Shirley’s story and her coming to the Sanctuary. Both books are lavishly illustrated with photographs.

I don’t know much about the Ringling Bros. center’s reputation, but the habitat looks okay. But (1) it’s a breeding center; what is Ringling doing breeding more elephants to live in captivity? (2) They were cited in the past for inappropriately restraining baby elephants to separate them from their mothers, which resulted in injuries. Another young elephant had to be euthanized after breaking its legs in a fall from a “plastic tub,” supposedly while playing, according to Ringling. The tub in question is of the kind used in performing circus tricks; the supposition by animal advocates was that the euthanized elephant had been undergoing circus training. (Wildlife Advocacy project:http://www.wildlifeadvocacy.org/current/circus/elephant_mistreatment.php)

From a published article on the topic reproduced on its author’s website:http://www.miamacdonald.com/a.php?id=35
“Conservationists and animal welfare groups agree that the greatest threat to Asian elephants is loss of habitat, as burgeoning human populations and extractive industries push into wilderness…. Asked why Ringling doesn’t redirect its efforts from breeding elephants to habitat conservation, Pflughaupt [Barbara Pflughaupt, Ringling’s national press representative] replies: ‘Habitat is another thing. We’re not a conservation organization. We’re a circus responsible for the care of our animals.'”

This is not to say that they are not doing something good (even if it’s only to be expected in terms of basic decency) in providing a place for their own retired elephants to live. But if they say that they’re not a conservation organization, why is the word “conservation” in their name? And again, what are they doing breeding more elephants?

Very happy for all elephants and elephant trainers too, to find paradise for them is very difficult but it seems like you guys making an excellent job. We have a place for elephants in North of Thailand too. And they allow visitor to go and also feed them, allow volunteer who would like to living close to them, I never been there myself but I have seen it on many show on tv and i think they have it on youtube as well.